Page 1
UC BerkeleyUC Berkeley Previously Published Works
TitleIdeology as Distorted Belief
Permalinkhttps://escholarship.org/uc/item/2fp9q9s7
JournalJournal of Political Ideologies, 1
AuthorBevir, Mark
Publication Date1996 Peer reviewed
eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital LibraryUniversity of California
Page 2
IDEOLOGY AS DISTORTED BELIEF
By
Mark Bevir
Department of Politics
University of Newcastle
Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU
[E-mail: [email protected] ]
Page 3
ABSTRACT
A critical theory of ideology must incorporate an analysis of distorted
belief unless it is to rest on a simplistic reductionism. And an analysis of
distorted belief must focus on the inner constitution of consciousness unless
it is to rest on a problematic claim to a privileged access to truth. This
essay endeavours to provide such an analysis. Distorted beliefs arise as a
result of deception, the action of the unconscious, or irrationality. In each
of these cases the distortion is motivated by a rogue pro-attitude, that is, a
preference other than for true belief which then exercises an illegitimate
influence on belief. Rogue pro-attitudes can derive from any one of a reason,
desire, or need.
Page 4
1
IDEOLOGY AS DISTORTED BELIEF
One way of classifying theories of ideology is to distinguish between
descriptive and critical ones. Descriptive theories portray ideology as an
integral part of our normal undistorted ways of thinking. To call a statement
or belief "ideological" is not necessarily to condemn it. Critical theories
portray ideology as an unhealthy departure from a normal or ideal way of
thinking. To call a statement or belief "ideological" just is to condemn it
as a distortion. It is arguable that recent scholarship has come to favour
descriptive theories. The alternatives on offer here include theories that
present all of our belief-systems as ideologies, theories that identify a
particular feature of political beliefs as a source of ideology, and theories
that relate ideology to beliefs which inspire action.1 I do not want to argue
that all, or even one, of these theories are substantively incorrect. But I
do want to point out that they all involve some loss of conceptual diversity.
They do so simply by excluding any critical dimension from our understanding
of ideology. To some extent, our concepts of belief, political belief, and
action-orientated belief already do the work that these theories want to
ascribe to our concept of ideology. Thus, given that many people do attach
critical associations to the term "ideology", there is at least a case for
trying to devise an acceptable, critical account of it.
The Marxist tradition has ensured that critical concepts of ideology
centre on the idea of a false consciousness that mirrors social relationships
of power and exploitation.2 One reason for the growing support for
descriptive theories of ideology appears to be a growing dissatisfaction with
the Marxist view of social consciousness as a passive reflection of material
life.3 Once we allow, as surely we must do, that consciousness does not arise
as a passive reflection of material life, then if we are to sustain a critical
Page 5
2
concept of ideology, we need an account of how distortions can enter into
consciousness. Either we adopt an unacceptably rigorous determinism, which
allows no autonomy to social consciousness, or we need an account of how and
when people come to adopt a distorted view of the world. After all, if people
do not adopt the beliefs they do as a necessary consequence of the nature of
the social base, then presumably there is a sense in which they do so for
reasons that make sense to them, in which case a critical theory of ideology
must include an account of how people can have reasons for adopting distorted
beliefs. The fact is: if the distorted nature of ideological consciousness is
not just a consequence of a passive reflection of the material base, it must
arise because of some sort of failure in consciousness itself. Once we reject
a simplistic reductionism, we have to ground a critical concept of ideology on
an analysis of the nature of distorted belief.
Another reason for the growing support for descriptive theories of
ideology appears to be a growing reluctance to assume one has a privileged
access to truth, a scientific viewpoint from which to declare ideological
beliefs false.4 Once we take a suitably modest view of our epistemological
location, then if we are to sustain a critical concept of ideology, we need an
account of distorted belief couched in terms of the inner constitution of
consciousness. Either we adopt a highly suspect presumption of the validity
of our own standpoint, or we need an account of how beliefs can be distorted
irrespective of the adequacy of their representation of the world. After all,
if the distorted nature of beliefs is not a matter of their being inadequate
to the world, then presumably there is a sense in which it is a matter of
their inner constitution, in which case a critical theory of ideology must
include an account of distortions internal to beliefs. Once we reject the
idea of a pre-existent truth to which we have access, we have to ground our
critique of ideology on an analysis of distortions that afflict the inner
Page 6
3
constitution of consciousness.
The preceding considerations define the question I want to address. How
should we unpack the concept of distorted belief that must inform any
adequate, critical theory of ideology? Although the answer to this question
will not provide us with a complete theory of ideology - this would require an
account of the relationship of at least some distorted beliefs to something
akin to relations of power - it will provide an account of how ideology
initially manifests itself in consciousness - and so an account of the sort of
beliefs that we would have to relate to relations of power. Thus I do not
hope to provide a complete theory of ideology. My concern is only with the
analysis of distorted belief on which a complete theory of ideology could be
constructed with the aid of suitable theories of power and the diffusion of
beliefs. Let us accept that we can not define ideological beliefs simply as
reflections of a corrupt material life. This means we initially must define
them by means of a purely formal analysis of the nature of corrupt belief.
Let us accept also that we can not have access to a pre-existent truth. This
means we initially must define corrupt belief by reference to the inner
constitution of consciousness.
In order to identify the nature of distorted belief, we first need to
grasp what counts as a normal, undistorted belief. Because we want to avoid
equating distorted beliefs with false ones, we must define undistorted belief
in terms of the normal constitution of consciousness, not truth. Equally
because we want to devise a critical theory of ideology, we must define normal
belief in a conceptual, even normative, manner, rather than an empirical one.5
We want a normative conceptual account of the inner workings of consciousness
against which to identify unhealthy distortions. The extent to which people
actually fall victim to the distortions we describe is irrelevant. Without
getting bogged down in what are complex issues, I think we safely can say here
Page 7
4
that normal beliefs are sincere, conscious, and rational, where rationality is
equated only with consistency: the possibility of deception presupposes a norm
of sincerity; Freud and others have taught us to look on unconscious beliefs
as somewhat pathological; and we usually find inconsistent beliefs troubling,
and even look for a way of reconciling them.
No doubt some people will be troubled by the implication that sincere,
conscious, and rational Nazis might hold normal beliefs. There are two points
to note here. First, a commitment to analysing distorted beliefs in terms of
the inner constitution of consciousness means Nazis indeed might hold normal
beliefs in this sense. Second, this does not mean we can not criticise their
beliefs. We can say their beliefs are false. And we also will be able to
condemn their beliefs as ideological provided we can relate them back to
distorted beliefs by means of suitable analyses of power and the diffusion of
beliefs. So, the varieties of distorted belief that I want to analyze are
insincerity, the unconscious, and the irrational.
To begin, I want to consider the nature of deception. When someone
tries to deceive someone else, they try to make that person believe something
they themselves believe is false. This definition of deception concentrates
on people attempting to bring someone to believe something, as opposed to
their succeeding in doing so. It does so because my interest lies with the
distortion associated with insincerity; that is, the way insincerity produces
a gap between expressed and actual beliefs. In cases of insincerity expressed
beliefs are distorted irrespective of the success or failure of the attempted
deception. Similarly, this definition of deception requires deceivers only to
believe that what they tell others is false, not to know that it is. No doubt
successful deception requires the deceiver to impart an actual falsehood, but,
once again, my interest lies in all cases in which expressed beliefs differ
from actual ones, and this does not depend on issues of truth. Finally, this
Page 8
5
definition makes lying a type of deception, not a synonym for deception. When
people lie, they try to make others believe something they believe to be
false, but people can try to make others believe something they believe to be
false by means other than lying. People can engage in deception not only by
expressing beliefs directly contrary to those they hold, but also by subtly
misrepresenting their beliefs. They can put a particular gloss on a statement
they believe to be more or less true, they can answer a question so as to
side-step an issue, or they can express just one aspect of their beliefs on a
subject. For example, imagine that a politician believes a worldwide trade-
cycle and government incompetence have combined to bring about an economic
depression. If the politician told an interviewer that the worldwide trade-
cycle had caused the depression, they might not be lying, but they still would
be practising deception by implying that the depression was in no way the
fault of the government.
All instances of insincerity involve some sort of disjunction between
actual and expressed beliefs. How should we unpack these two sets of beliefs
and the disjunction between them? Consider the actual beliefs of deceivers.
The fact that someone practices deception does not imply their actual beliefs
are either unconscious or irrational. Thus we can explain the actual beliefs
of deceivers in the same way we explain normal beliefs. No doubt the evidence
we have of the actual beliefs of deceivers generally differs from the evidence
we have of the actual beliefs of sincere people, and no doubt this difference
in types of evidence is such that generally we have more trouble identifying
the actual beliefs of deceivers than those of sincere people. Nonetheless,
the extra difficulty in attributing beliefs to deceivers does not affect the
way in which we should explain the beliefs that we do attribute to them. We
can explain the actual beliefs of deceivers by relating them to things such as
their webs of belief, the traditions into which they have been socialised, and
Page 9
6
their experiences of life.
Next consider the disjunction between actual and expressed beliefs.
When we investigate such a disjunction, we concern ourselves with an action,
not just beliefs. We ask why someone performed the act of deception that they
did. We ask why they expressed beliefs other than their actual beliefs. Here
if we are to explain any action we must refer to the relevant pro-attitudes as
well as the relevant beliefs.6 To explain a disjunction between actual and
expressed beliefs, we have to refer to the pro-attitudes that motivated the
deceiver. For example, imagine that politicians try to absolve the government
of blame for a depression by saying it was caused by a worldwide trade-cycle,
although they actually believe the government to be partly responsible for it.
We might explain the gap between their expressed beliefs and their actual
ones by referring to the pro-attitude they hold towards enhancing the
popularity of the government. A pro-attitude enables us to explain why
someone performed an act of deception; that is, why a deceiver expressed
beliefs other than their actual beliefs.
Whilst the pro-attitude behind an act of deception often will be a
hidden preference for a definite outcome, this need not be so. Sometimes
deceivers act as they do due to an open preference for a definite outcome. If
they want to prick pomposity or to expose folly, they might well tell other
people about the outcome they hope to bring about. In these cases we might be
able to justify a claim that a particular pro-attitude motivated an act of
deception by reference to statements in which the deceiver openly acknowledged
this was so. Moreover, sometimes deceivers act as they do due to an open pro-
attitude that does not point to a definite outcome. (Shakespearean comedy
provides several examples of deception motivated by a simple delight in fun or
mischief.) In these cases we have to explain the act of deception in terms of
Page 10
7
a vague pro-attitude with little positive content.
Finally consider the expressed beliefs of the deceiver. Deceivers
express beliefs other than their actual ones in order to mislead other people
about something, so presumably they choose to express the beliefs that they do
precisely because they think other people will understand or react to these
beliefs in a certain way. Deceivers express the beliefs they do because they
think social conventions will lead people to understand them in a certain way.
Thus we can explain why deceivers express the beliefs they do by referring to
their actual beliefs about how others will react to the beliefs they express.
We can explain the expressed beliefs of a deceiver by showing the deceiver
thought expressing these beliefs would promote a state of affairs for which
they had some sort of preference. For example, when politicians say that a
worldwide trade-cycle caused a depression they believe to be in part a result
of economic mismanagement by the government, they do so because they think
that other people will take them to be absolving the government of blame for
the depression. They do so because they expect thereby to enhance the
popularity of the government. The actual beliefs of deceivers about how
others will react to the beliefs they express usually will be conscious,
rational beliefs. Thus we can explain the ways in which deceivers believe
other people will understand the beliefs they express in the same way we
explain normal beliefs.
I want to turn now to unconscious beliefs. Consider a politician who
the pundits agree is about to lose an election. Imagine that the politician
sincerely believes they will win the election, dismissing the experts and
opinion polls as miss-leading. Imagine also that the politician nonetheless
acts as though they will lose the election by distancing themselves from the
campaign so as to avoid blame for defeat, making preparations to move out of
Page 11
8
their official residence, and starting to plan the writing of their memoirs.
This type of self-deception, like deception, encapsulates a difference between
expressed and actual beliefs. Consider first the actual beliefs of self-
deceivers. These beliefs are exactly like normal beliefs except that they
have been barred from our conscious, that is, to adopt Freudian terminology,
repressed. Thus we can explain someone's unconscious beliefs in the same way
as we do normal beliefs. We can make sense of them by reference to things
such as their whole web of beliefs, the traditions in which they were raised,
and their experiences of life. For example, the politician might believe
unconsciously that they will lose the election because the pundits have told
them so, and they think the pundits generally know what they are talking
about, and anyway they think governments typically do lose elections when the
economy is in a mess. Moreover, they might believe (consciously or perhaps
unconsciously) that the pundits know what they are talking about, and that
governments often lose elections when the economy is in a mess, because these
beliefs were conveyed to them as part of an intellectual tradition during the
process of socialisation.
Next consider the disjunction between actual and expressed beliefs in
cases of self-deception. This disjunction arises because of the operation of
both a censor and a pro-attitude. Self-deception, unlike deception, involves
hiding unconscious beliefs from oneself, so there must be a censor to prevent
self-deceivers from consciously recognising their actual beliefs. Also, self-
deception, like deception, is an action, not a belief, so there must be a pro-
attitude that motivates it. Crucially, a pro-attitude and the action of a
censor are sufficient to explain the action of the unconscious. We have no
need to adopt the paraphernalia of Freudian psychology; no need to ascribe an
instinctual basis to the unconscious. We can understand perfectly well how
Page 12
9
self-deception can occur due to a pro-attitude and a censor alone.
The pro-attitudes that inspire acts of self-deception, unlike those that
inspire acts of deception, must be hidden. A self-deceiver can not possibly
be conscious of the way in which the pro-attitude influences their beliefs.
True, the pro-attitude sometimes can be a part of the conscious as well as the
unconscious, but when this is so its actual operation must be excluded from
the conscious, and so hidden. Because the operation of the pro-attitude must
be hidden from the self-deceiver, the self-deceiver can not tell others about
it. Thus we can justify a claim that a particular pro-attitude underlay a
given instance of self-deception only by referring to the hidden implications
of the actions of the self-deceiver. We can not do so by referring to the
utterances of the self-deceiver. Moreover, the pro-attitudes that underlie
self-deception, unlike those that underlie deception, must be preferences for
a definite outcome. People always have some sort of a preference for holding
true beliefs, so only an even stronger preference for a definite state of
affairs can make them act so as to prevent their holding what they think are
true beliefs. People can not deceive themselves out of sheer mischief. They
must want their beliefs to be true unless they have a particular reason not to
do so. This means that we always can give quite specific content to a pro-
attitude that inspired an act of self-deception.
Finally consider the expressed beliefs of self-deceivers. Although
these beliefs belong in the conscious mind, we must explain them if we are to
explain the precise nature of a given case of self-deception. Because people
have some sort of preference for true beliefs, they almost always try to make
the beliefs with which they deceive themselves as convincing as they possibly
can. This means that they try to make the conscious beliefs that they express
more or less internally coherent. Thus we can begin to explain the expressed
Page 13
10
beliefs of a self-deceiver as we do normal beliefs by presenting them as a
coherent web. Nonetheless, we can not explain the emergence and the nature of
these webs of belief in the way in which we would normal ones. We can not do
so because self-deceivers adopt the conscious beliefs they do because of the
abnormal action of the unconscious. Because the expressed beliefs of self-
deceivers always represent an attempt to realise a primary aim other than
truth, an explanation of them must refer to this aim. Thus we can explain the
expressed beliefs of a self-deceiver by referring to the unconscious operation
of a pro-attitude. This means we need to show how their conscious beliefs fit
in with the pro-attitude that motivated them. Crucially, because we can make
sense of the expressed beliefs of self-deceivers simply by portraying them as
webs of belief centred on unconscious pro-attitudes, we need not follow Freud
in insisting on the importance of relating the content and result of the
unconscious to the sexual experiences of childhood.
I want to turn now to irrational beliefs. It is irrational to believe
things that are inconsistent with one another. What does this irrationality
consist of? If people believe two contradictory beliefs X and Y, they might
have good reasons for believing X, so believing X can not be the source of
their irrationality, and they also might have good reasons for believing Y, so
believing Y can not be the source of their irrationality. Their irrationality
consists in their believing X and Y together when X and Y are inconsistent
with one another. Critics might object that this concern with consistency is
culturally specific, so our definition of irrationality applies only to people
within certain cultures. This criticism arises out of the ambiguity of our
concept of consistency. Here a strong concern with consistency can suggest an
attempt to adhere to all the varied logical operations we today take to be
valid. Perhaps the validity of some of these logical operations really is
Page 14
11
specific to particular cultures, though no doubt the validity of others is
not. But a weak concern with consistency can suggest an attempt to adhere to
whatever logical operations one considers to be valid. This makes consistency
consist solely in following the logical maxims one accepts for oneself, not in
following the logical maxims our particular culture takes to be valid. Thus
if we define irrational belief in terms of a weak concept of consistency, we
can meet the scruples of our critics. Irrational belief represents a failure
to relate one's beliefs to each other in accord with one's own second-order
beliefs about the nature of best belief.7
It is possible that our critics still might object that the idea of
second-order beliefs about the nature of best belief is a culturally specific
one. But this is not so. If someone had no second-order beliefs about the
nature of best belief, they would be unable to decide what to believe and what
not to believe, which would mean they would be unable to hold any beliefs at
all. Thus because anyone who has beliefs must have second-order beliefs about
the nature of best belief, our definition of irrationality is not a culturally
specific one.
Philosophers distinguish between hot and cold cases of irrationality
according to whether or not the irrationality is motivated by a pro-attitude.8
Cases of hot irrationality resemble distortions that arise when the operation
of an unconscious pro-attitude results not just in a gap between expressed and
actual beliefs, but in expressed and actual beliefs that actually contradict
one another. No doubt some cases of hot irrationality could not occur if the
people concerned had conscious or preconscious knowledge of all their beliefs.
But we can not reduce hot irrationality to a form of the unconscious because
the person concerned could be aware of all of the relevant beliefs either
consciously or, more plausibly, preconsciously. For example, a politician
Page 15
12
might believe consciously that they are going to win a forthcoming election
whilst also being aware that they are kidding themselves as they truly believe
they are going to lose. It is true, however, that we can explain cases of hot
irrationality in much the same way as we do distortions produced by the action
of the unconscious. We can explain the main system of beliefs as we do normal
beliefs. We can explain the rogue belief or rogue set of beliefs as we do the
expressed beliefs associated with the unconscious, that is, by showing how
they coalesce around the relevant pro-attitude. And we can explain the place
of rogue beliefs within the whole mind by reference to the operation of a
rogue pro-attitude.
Instances of cold irrationality are a bit different. Sometimes people
hold beliefs contrary to their belief about the nature of best belief simply
because their reasoning is at fault. Reasoning is a skill, and, as with all
skills, we can exercise it more or less competently. When people fall short
of an ideal competence, they make mistakes that are not the result of their
pro-attitudes exerting an illegitimate influence on their beliefs. Cold
irrationality consists of unmotivated mistakes in reasoning; that is, mistakes
that are due to incompetence, not rogue pro-attitudes. Psychologists have
found that one common mistake is to ascribe undue weight to evidence that is
near at hand not because of an illegitimate pro-attitude but simply because it
is near at hand. People can do this even when they are aware of the danger.
For example, a politician might believe they are going to win a forthcoming
election the pundits say they will loose because they put to much weight on
the assurances of their close advisors that they will win. Their belief about
best belief might encourage them to pay as much heed to the pundits as to
their close advisors, but they still might fall into the trap of overweighing
evidence that is close at hand; and they might do so not because of a rogue
Page 16
13
pro-attitude, but simply because this is a mistake people do make.
Clearly we can not explain cold irrationality understood as unmotivated
incompetence in the way we do other beliefs. We can not explain it by giving
reasons for it precisely because it is unmotivated: we can not give reasons
that are beliefs because the beliefs in question are irrational, and we can
not give reasons that are pro-attitudes because the irrationality in question
is not motivated. Cold irrationality is inexplicable in its very nature. Of
course, we can describe the common traps that people fall into, and we can
show how these common traps produce common patterns of incompetent reasoning.
However, the existence of such traps does not explain why people fall into
them. The best we can do is to assimilate a case of cold irrationality to a
pattern that recurs in similar cases, but this is not to explain it. The best
we can do is to describe the sort of mistake that arises when reasoning fails
in a certain way, but this is not to explain why reasoning fails in this way
in a particular instance.
In general, therefore, we can explain distortions by reference to the
pro-attitudes that motivate them: insincerity occurs when pro-attitudes prompt
people to engage in deception; the unconscious appears when pro-attitudes lead
people to express beliefs other than their actual beliefs in what are acts of
self-deception; and the irrational appears when pro-attitudes illegitimately
influence the reasoning process. The only exception to this rule are cases of
cold irrationality. However, I propose that we ignore any problems which cold
irrationality might pose. I think we reasonably can do so, firstly, because
cold irrationality is inherently inexplicable, and, secondly, because their
are obvious difficulties in the idea that ideologies can be unmotivated in the
way it is. Explanations of distortions work by pointing to the influence of
rogue pro-attitudes on the beliefs people express.
Page 17
14
My concern in what follows, therefore, will be to expand my account of
ideology as based on distorted belief by filling out the concept of a pro-
attitude. I want to specify what sort of things are capable of generating
pro-attitudes, and so motivating distorted beliefs. Pro-attitudes can arise
from any one of our intellect, our emotions, or our physiology. If we asked
someone what pro-attitude had given them a motive for acting as they did, they
could reply by mentioning any one of a reason, a desire, or a need. Of course
people can have mixed motives, but this implies only that several different
pro-attitudes can motivate a given action; it does not imply that any of the
pro-attitudes concerned can derive from something other than a reason, a
desire, or a need. Similarly, people can have open or hidden motives, but
this implies only that they can be willing or unwilling to acknowledge the way
in which a given pro-attitude prompted their action; it does not imply that
the pro-attitudes they do or do not acknowledge can derive from something
other than a reason, a desire, or a need. All pro-attitudes derive from
reasons, desires, or needs. I will consider each in turn.
When a pro-attitude rests on a reason, we describe the motive for the
relevant action as a conviction that a state of affairs is unacceptable, or
admirable, or both. Reasons are convictions; that is, beliefs about what is
good and what is bad. They are products of the intellect. They are the
result of the process of thinking. Moral convictions provide the clearest
examples of reasons. For example, Hindu fundamentalists who want to make the
slaughtering of cows illegal because they are convinced doing so is morally
right have as a motive a pro-attitude that is based on a reason. They want to
ban the killing of cows because their intellect tells them this is the right
thing to do. However, moral convictions are not the only reasons capable of
generating pro-attitudes. Reasons can be convictions about the way things
Page 18
15
are, or about what is appropriate, which have no substantive moral content.
For example, a Brahmin in India might not eat meat simply because members of
their caste are vegetarians; not because they think eating meat is wrong, nor
even because they think they should respect caste rules, but simply because
that is the way things are for people like them.
When a pro-attitude rests on a desire, we describe the motive for the
relevant action as a feeling that a state of affairs should be altered or
established or both. Desires are emotions; that is, sentiments about what is
to be hoped and what is to be feared. They are products of the passions.
They are the result of our feelings. The unity of consciousness means that we
can reflect on our desires, and when this happens we might act on a desire we
have thought about, but it is still the desire, understood as an emotion, not
the reason, understood as a conviction, which constitutes the content of our
motive. Sometimes we act because we desire something. For example, white
supremacists who try to avoid blacks because they are afraid of them have as a
motive a pro-attitude that is based on a desire. They try to avoid blacks
because they have an emotional fear of them.
When a pro-attitude rests on a need, we describe the motive for the
relevant action as a physiological impulse to end a state of affairs, or to
bring a state of affairs into being, or both. Needs are requirements of the
body. They are groups of physiological states, whose absence would prevent
the survival, or at the very least the normal functioning, of the body.
People automatically act to sustain themselves unless they definitely choose
to do otherwise, and when they automatically act to sustain themselves the
pro-attitude that prompts them to do so is a physiological need. For example,
people who eat because they are starving, or sleep because they are tired,
have as a motive a pro-attitude that is based on a need. They eat and sleep
Page 19
16
because their bodies need food and rest if they are to survive, or at the very
least if they are to function normally. It is important to recognise that we
can explain actions by referring to needs only in so far as we are able to
unpack statements about needs as statements about physiological states that we
know to be essential either to survival or the normal functioning of the body.
This is why we can not legitimately extend the concept of physiological needs
to incorporate psychological drives. The concept of a drive represents a
misguided attempt to interpret the concept of a desire using the language of
natural science. Really, because we have no reason to assume that people have
psychological drives that they must satisfy somehow, we ought to translate our
pseudo-scientific talk of drives back into the language of folk psychology.9
Needs can explain actions only because they have a physiological nature.
My analysis of folk psychology suggests that any one of a reason, a
desire, or a need can give people a pro-attitude, which then can prompt them
to perform an action, including the adoption of distorted beliefs. However, a
number of scholars have tried to reduce all pro-attitudes to one or other of
needs, desires, or reasons. To defend a pluralist analysis of pro-attitudes,
I want to argue that these reductionist programmes fail.
Because physicalists think all human actions have physiological causes,
they often reduce reasons and desires to needs, drives, or the like. For
example, Freud sometimes suggested that we could use certain instincts as a
basis for causal explanations of all human actions. His account of the
preservative and aggressive instincts points to a reductive view of reasons
and desires, irrespective of whether they are conscious or unconscious.10 He
suggested that physiological tension constituted a sort of pain, which then
activated the mental processes that prompted people to act.11 It is true that
we sometimes associate a specific physiological state with a specific type of
Page 20
17
action. For example, stomach contractions can indicate hunger, which often
prompts people to eat. Nonetheless, the fact that we sometimes associate a
physiological state with an action does not sustain a physicalist position.
It establishes only that needs can motivate actions, not that needs alone can
motivate actions.
Any attempt to associate all actions with prior physiological states
confronts insurmountable obstacles. For a start, we can not identify most
actions with an antecedent physiological state. We know of no physiological
state that usually precedes voting, rioting, or reading a political tract.
Moreover, even when we can identify an action with a given antecedent
physiological state, this state does not seem to be necessary to bring about
the corresponding action. It does not do so precisely because people can act
voluntarily in accord with a desire or a reason that does not have any
physiological basis. For example, people might choose to eat, even though
they are not hungry, because they feel like tasting a particular dish, or
because they think they should try to put on weight, and, in these cases,
their eating presumably will not be preceded by stomach contractions.
Physicalists might argue that even when people eat when they are not hungry,
there still must be antecedent physiological states that prompt them to do so.
However, because they can not begin to describe these physiological states,
and because we have no evidence that these states exist, therefore, their
physicalism represents a mere aspiration, a research programme based on a
faith in science. Thus, at least for the moment, we can not unpack the
concept of a pro-attitude solely in terms of physiological needs, drives, or
the like.
Humeans often attempt to reduce all pro-attitudes to desires, conceived
as emotions or dispositions, not to needs conceived as physiological states.
Page 21
18
Hume argued that reason alone does not have the power to move us to act. Thus
because he paid little heed to the role of needs, he concluded that the pro-
attitudes which motivate us always must be desires, defined as passions or
emotions.12 He reduced all pro-attitudes to desires on the grounds that,
first, we act to realise a state of affairs only if we prefer it to another
state of affairs, and, second, reason alone can not give us preferences. Why
can reason not give us preferences? Hume argued that the objects of reason
had to be propositions; that is, descriptive statements that are either true
or false. Thus, he concluded, because propositions do not exist in space and
time, reason can not have as its object things in space and time, so reason
can not influence human actions, understood as things that clearly do occur in
space and time.
This Humean argument fails because of its inadequate characterisation of
reason. When we reason, we do not just contemplate propositions, we also take
a stance towards them. When we reason, we do not just process statements as
true or false, we also come to accept them as true or false. Here the stance
we take towards a proposition is a psychological state, which exists in space
and time. Thus, because our reason leads us to take a stance in space and
time, it can influence our actions in space and time. When our reason leads
us to take a proposition as true or false, we thereby give ourselves a motive
for acting or not acting in a particular way. Hume's argument fails because
the objects of the process of reasoning are not propositions, but rather our
convictions about propositions, and, although a proposition can not give us a
motive for action, a conviction that a proposition is true or false can do so.
Critics might object that the stance we take to a proposition is a
matter of desire, not reason. This objection is most implausible. Surely
when we say someone is convinced of something, we do not conceive of their
Page 22
19
conviction as an emotion. Rather, we take their conviction to be a product of
their reason, although we might think that their reasoning was faulty. For
example, imagine Hindu fundamentalists banned the slaughter of cows because
they were convinced that this was the right thing to do - they did so because
they took the proposition "this state should prohibit the killing of cows" to
be true. Surely their conviction that the law should prohibit the slaughter
of cows is a thought which provides them with a reason to perform an action,
not an emotion which provides them with a desire to do so.
Humeans sometimes offer us a rather different argument in favour of the
reduction of all pro-attitudes to desires. Hume suggests that reason can lead
us to recognise something as a means to an end, but it can not commend an end
to us. We adopt the ends that we do as emotional commitments, not reasoned
convictions. All human actions ultimately arise from desires because desires
alone can give us our basic ends. For instance, a Humean might say, if we ask
the Hindu fundamentalists why they banned the slaughter of cows, and they said
that they did so because they thought it was the right thing to do, we can ask
them why they have a preference for doing the right thing, and, if they reply
they do so because they think doing the right thing brings good karma, we then
can ask them why they have a pro-attitude to good karma, and so we could go on
until they expressed a basic emotional commitment, perhaps saying that they
fear pain. To explain basic preferences, we must refer to desires.
This Humean argument for the reduction of pro-attitudes to desires is
valid only if we so deprive the concept of desire of all content as to render
the argument vacuous. Pro-attitudes differ from beliefs because they inspire
actions to alter the world, whereas beliefs attempt to grasp the world as it
is, including what future possibilities could be realised through what acts.
This difference sustains a parallel one between reason as commitment and
Page 23
20
reason as conviction. When our reason commits us to an attempt to realise
something it gives us a pro-attitude. When it convinces us of the truth or
falsity of something it gives us a belief. The Humean argument is that reason
itself can not take us from convictions to commitments. Humeans say that we
can commit ourselves to something only on the basis of a desire. This is true
if vacuous; otherwise it is false. If we define reason in terms of conviction
alone, and if we also define desire to include reason as commitment, then of
course reason can not give us a pro-attitude. However, the Humean argument
loses its plausibility once we break this charmed circle of definitions. If
we do not define desire to include reason as commitment, we have no reason to
assume that the commitments we adopt as a result of our reason must be the
same as those we adopt as a result of our emotions. Crucially, because the
Humean reduction of pro-attitudes to desires can be made to work only by
definition, it has no explanatory value. If all pro-attitudes by definition
spring from the passions, any explanation of pro-attitudes in terms of the
passions must be vacuous.
The foregoing argument points to a more general critique of
emotionalism, understood as the reduction of pro-attitudes to desires. All
forms of emotionalism confront the difficulty that we can distinguish between
thinking something desirable and actually desiring it: wealthy entrepreneurs
can think higher taxes desirable without desiring them. This distinction
gives rise to one between reasoned commitments to what one thinks desirable
and one's actual desires, and in turn this distinction clearly implies that we
can not reduce pro-attitudes to desires. Pro-attitudes can arise from
reasoned commitments defined in contrast to desires. Emotionalists can
overcome this difficulty only by arguing that we necessarily desire the things
we think desirable. But this argument is either vacuous or false. If the
Page 24
21
things we think desirable are by definition things we desire, then it is
vacuous. But if the things we think desirable are not by definition the
things we desire, it is false simply because we often do not feel any desire
for something we think desirable.
The rationalist equivalent of emotionalism and physicalism is the
reduction of all pro-attitudes to reasons at the expense of desires and needs.
Rationalism fails because things other than reason can give us pro-attitudes,
and sometimes even pro-attitudes contrary to those suggested by reason. Our
desires and needs sometimes override our reason so as to lead us to act in one
way even though we think acting in another way would be preferable. A reason
for performing an action encourages us to do so, but it does not impel us to
do so. When a reason gives us a definite preference for a particular action,
we still might perform a contrary action because of either an emotional desire
or a physiological need. Someone might think something highly desirable, and
they might even desire to desire it, and yet they still might not actually
desire it, so they might consciously choose to act on a contrary desire. We
often encounter just this sort of behaviour. Indeed, the overriding of
reasons by desires or needs accounts for some of - and quite possibly all of -
the cases people usually describe in terms of weakness of the will. It is not
really that the will is weak, and so unable to compel the body to act in
accord with a pro-attitude. It is rather that a desire or need trumps the
reason, so the pro-attitude we act on is not the one our reason would wish us
to act on. Consider a case in which desire overrides reason. A politician
might think it highly desirable that they should tell the electorate about
corruption in the government, but nonetheless not do so due to fear. Their
reason gives them one preference, their desires give them another, and they
act on the latter. Now consider a case in which a need overrides a reason.
Page 25
22
Someone might think it highly desirable that they should stop smoking, but
nonetheless so crave a cigarette they have one. Their reason gives them one
preference, their physiological needs give them another, and they act on the
latter. Rationalists who would reduce all pro-attitudes to reasons can
account for these sorts of cases only by saying that the people involved have
a reason, not a desire, for going keeping quiet about corruption, and a
reason, not a need, for having a cigarette. But to say this would be either
to say something false, or to make rationalism true by definition, and so
vacuous.
Physicalism, emotionalism, and rationalism all rest on the strange
assumption that any acceptable account of human motivation must be a monistic
one. Only a prior commitment to monism could lead philosophers to reject the
pluralism that is implicit within our folk psychology and instead attempt to
reduce all pro-attitudes to a particular psychological or physiological
source. But why should we prefer a monistic to a pluralistic account of human
motivation? What stands against our accepting the obvious plurality of our
physical and mental requirements and capacities? Because needs, emotions, and
thoughts can take all sorts of things as their subject matter, it is possible
that a single object might be the subject of a need, a desire, and a reason.
What is more, the unity of consciousness, and the unity of mind and body, both
imply that individuals can think about their emotions or their needs, and want
to have certain needs or thoughts, and perhaps even need to have certain
thoughts or emotions. But the fact that our various physical and mental
capacities can go to work on the same things, and even on one another, does
not imply that we can reduce any one of these capacities to another one. All
of these capacities are basic.
I have tried to develop a critical concept of ideology as distorted
Page 26
23
belief so as to avoid both an unacceptable reductionism and a problematic
claim to a privileged epistemological position. On my account distorted
beliefs arise not as a passive reflection of distortions in our material life,
but as a consequence of an illegitimate process of belief-formation within
mind itself. On my account distorted beliefs are not defined as false ones
but as ones in which the inner constitution of consciousness is flawed. What
corrupts the process of belief-formation, at least in the first instance, is
the operation of a rogue pro-attitude within the mind of the believer. Here a
rogue pro-attitude is a need, desire, or reason that leads someone to adopt a
belief in accord with a preference other than one for holding true beliefs.
Ideological beliefs can be defined as distorted or corrupt, and so criticised,
without our presupposing that we have a privileged access to truth.
Earlier I pointed out that although an analysis of distorted belief
could provide the basis of a non-reductionist theory of ideology, it could not
provide a complete theory of ideology. By way of a conclusion, I want now to
indicate briefly how one might move from an analysis of distorted belief to a
complete theory of ideology. The first question here is: how does an analysis
of distorted belief relate to the concept of power, which must have some role
in any adequate, critical theory of ideology? The outline of the answer to
this question seems quite clear. A distorted belief is an ideological belief
when the pro-attitude that motivates it is a preference for greater power.
This means that ideological beliefs can not derive from the illegitimate
action of a need, but only a desire or a reason. Because we do not have a
physiological need for power, it must be emotive or intellectual preferences
for greater power that motivate the distorted nature of ideological belief.
This also means that distorted beliefs need not serve the actual interests of
those who hold them. Because the distortions arise out of their preference
Page 27
24
for power, not their actual power, if they are mistaken in their view of what
will bring them power, the distortions might not serve their supposed purpose.
Ideologues can dupe themselves. However, the detailed answer to this
question seems far from clear. The content of the concept of a preference for
power must depend on an adequate analysis of the concept of power, and to
provide such an analysis is no easy task.
The nature of the relationship I have proposed between distorted beliefs
and power raises a second question for any prospective theory of ideology.
How does a distortion produced by a preference for greater power come to
manifest itself in the beliefs of others who do not hold the illegitimate pro-
attitude? Ideally a complete theory of ideology would incorporate not just an
account of how people come to voice distorted beliefs because of a preference
for greater power, but also an account of how other people then come to hold
these same distorted beliefs. Once again, the outline of the answer to this
question seems quite clear. Although some of those who adhere to an ideology
must hold it as a distorted belief, although their beliefs must be corrupted
by a preference for greater power, not all the adherents need do so. Others
can come to adhere to an ideology in good faith; that is, as a result of the
normal process of belief formation. This means that the distorted beliefs at
the heart of the phenomenon of ideology might be only a small part of the
total phenomenon. Because people sincerely, consciously, and rationally can
adopt beliefs that others developed insincerely, unconsciously, or
irrationally, ideology can spread beyond its origins in distorted belief.
However, here too the detailed answer to this question seems far from clear.
A proper account of how people transmit their distorted beliefs to others must
depend on an analysis of the social diffusion of beliefs within different
institutional contexts. Perhaps one might draw here on something like
Page 28
25
Althusser's concept of the state apparatuses.13 My own inclination, however,
is to say that the process by which ideological beliefs are diffused often
owes at least as much to the inherent plausibility of the beliefs as to any
institutional setting. This seems to me to be implicit in the claim that the
others do not have distorted beliefs in the sense of beliefs that are
corrupted by a rogue pro-attitude of their own. If my inclination is right,
there will be interesting work to be done on how the constraints of
plausibility affect ideologies.14
Page 29
NOTES
1. For examples of these approaches to ideology see respectively M. Seliger,
Ideology and Politics (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1976); M. Freeden,
"Political Concepts and Ideological Morphology", Journal of Political
Philosophy 2 (1994), 140-64; and I. Adams, The Logic of Political Belief (Hemel
Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1989).
2. See especially K. Marx, "Preface to A Critique of Political Economy", in
Karl Marx: Selected Writings, ed. D. McLellan (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1977), pp. 388-91.
3. cf. M. Foucault, Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews and Other Writings,
1972-77, ed. C. Gordon (Brighton: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1980), p. 118.
4. cf. Ibid., p. 118.
5. Thus my approach to ideology is different in kind from that associated with
other scholars who relate ideology to psychology. Whereas I use a normative
account of consciousness to develop a critical theory of ideology, they use an
empirical psychology to develop a descriptive theory. See, for example, M.
Billig, Ideology and Opinions (London: Sage, 1991); and S. Rosenberg, Reason,
Ideology and Politics (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1988).
Billig ties ideology to the rhetorical nature of everyday thinking. Rosenberg
ties it to Piaget's empirical psychology. Both see ideology as distorted only
in so far as it is corrupted by the social context. Again, I do not want to
argue that their theories are wrong as descriptive accounts of all or some of
our thinking. I merely want to say that we lose some conceptual diversity if
we fail to define ideology in an inherently critical way.
Page 30
6. I have taken the concept of a pro-attitude from D. Davidson, "Actions,
Reasons, and Causes", in Essays on Actions and Events (Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1980). Doing so enables me to highlight the fact that desires are just one of
several bases for our preferences and so motives.
7. This approach to consistency also allows for the fact that people need not
regard contradiction as a great evil, a point made in M. Billig, Ideology and
Social Psychology (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1982). It is certainly possible
that someone's concept of best belief might be compatible with contradictory
beliefs, and this is so even if we take a much stricter view of contradiction
than does Billig. Someone might believe two contradictory things, and they
might do so on the grounds that this is the best understanding of the world
currently available, whilst also seeking to find a way of reconciling them.
8. See, for example, D. Pears, Motivated Irrationality (Oxford: Clarendon
Press, 1984).
9. So, I am not arguing that we do not have drives at all. I am arguing only
that we do not have drives that we must satisfy somehow. If we have drives, we
do not have to act on them; we can choose not to do so for a reason. Thus if
we have drives they are not akin to physiological needs, but rather to
psychological emotions.
10. See particularly S. Freud, "Instincts and their Vicissitudes", and "Beyond
the Pleasure Principle", in The Standard Edition of The Complete Psychological
Works of Sigmund Freud, ed. & trans. J. Strachey, 24 Vols. (London: Hogarth
Press, 1953-74), Vol. 14 (pp. 109-40) & Vol. 18 (pp. 1-64).
11. S. Freud, "Project for a Scientific Psychology", in Complete Psychological
Page 31
28
Works, Vol. 1 (pp. 283-397).
12. D. Hume, A Treatise of Human Nature, ed. L. A. Selby-Bigge (Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1958).
13. See especially L. Althusser, "Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses
(Notes towards an investigation)", in Lenin and Philosophy, and Other Essays,
trans. B. Brewster (London: New Left Books, 1971), pp. 121-73.
14. For an example of how the plausibility constraint of consistency (and there
are others) can constrain a politicians see Q. Skinner, "The Principles and
Practice of Opposition: The Case of Bolingbroke versus Walpole", in N.
McKendrick, ed., Historical Perspectives: Essays in Honour of J. H. Plumb
(London: Europa Publications, 1974), pp. 93-128.